In 1546, Albert and his father William IV ordered the construction of
Dachau Palace (completed 1577), a
Renaissance style four-winged palace with a court garden which eventually become the preferred dwelling of the rulers of Bavaria. In 1552, Albert commissioned an inventory of the jewelry which he and his wife Anna owned. The resulting manuscript, still held by the
Bavarian State Library, was the
Jewel Book of the Duchess Anna of Bavaria ("Kleinodienbuch der Herzogin Anna von Bayern"), and contains 110 drawings by
Hans Muelich. Albert was a
patron of the arts and a collector whose personal accumulations are the basis of the
Wittelsbach antique collection of Greek and Roman antiquities, the coin collection, and the Wittelsbach treasury in the
Munich Residenz founded by him to house the jewels of the Wittelsbach dynasty; some of his Egyptian antiquities remain in the
collection of Egyptian art. His personal library founded in 1558 has come to the
Bavarian State Library in Munich, inheritor of the Wittelsbach court library. In 1559 Albert founded the
Paedagogium in Munich. Albert bought whole collections in Rome and Venice; in Venice, after tiresome drawn-out negotiations with the aged Andrea Loredan, he purchased the Loredan collection virtually in its entirety: 120 bronzes, 2480 medals and coins, 91 marble heads, 43 marble statues, 33 reliefs and 14 various curiosities, for the sum of 7000 ducats; "they were all exported from Venice secretly at night in large chests". At the same time, squabbles among the heirs of
Gabriele Vendramin thwarted him in his attempt to purchase the single most important collection in Venice and paintings and antiquities, drawings by the masters and ancient coins. To house his extensive collection of antiquities he commissioned the
Antiquarium (created 1568–1571) in the
Munich Residenz, the largest
Renaissance hall north of the Alps. Albert appointed
Orlando di Lasso to a court post and patronized many other artists; this led to a huge burden of debts (½ Mio. Fl.). Albert died in 1579 in Munich and was succeeded by his son William. He is buried in the
Frauenkirche in Munich. ==Family and children==